The History of Ireland: 17th Century. Bagwell Richard

The History of Ireland: 17th Century - Bagwell Richard


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joined with them, and seemed to like the aspect of us that were planets, as well as that of their own fixed stars.’ At Waterford, where they held their first sittings, the judges found very few prisoners that were not ‘bastard imps of the Powers and Geraldines of the Decies.’ They always had cousins on the jury, and no convictions could be had unless the evidence was absolutely clear, when threats of the Star Chamber generally produced a verdict. The ‘promiscuous generation of bastards’ he believed due to slack government both civil and ecclesiastical. They were considered just as good as the lawful children, and commonly shared the inheritance as well as the name. ‘I may truly affirm,’ he said, ‘that there are more able men of the surname of the Bourkes than of any name whatsoever in Europe.’ And so it was with all the great families, whether Anglo-Norman or Celtic. To scatter and break up these clannish combinations appeared to Davies an excellent policy. The judges slept at Dungarvan and Youghal, where they saw the chief people, dined with Lord Barrymore on their way to Cork, and found the gaols there pretty full. They lectured the chief gentry upon their addiction to ‘coshery and other Irish occupations,’ in spite of the King’s proclamation.[84]

      Assizes for Limerick

      and Clare.

      Assizes at Clonmel.

      Grand jury and petty juries at Monaghan

      How the gentry lived.

      Assizes for Fermanagh,

      and Cavan, 1606.

      The Act of Supremacy at Waterford, 1606,

      at New Ross,

      at Wexford,

      and at Wicklow.

      Rival hierarchies.

      Compulsory church-going, 1607.


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